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Tsunami -
hit women
running a gauntlet of new challenges |
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Tsunami - hit women in the South |
They were paddy
cultivators, string hopper makers or vegetable sellers
before the tsunami struck exactly one-year ago. The killer
waves wrecked their lives. The p7ain remains to this day, and
some of the losses are permanent. But even so, many have
sprung to life and picked up the lost threads, though some
have been idling, depending on relief and grants. A few have
taken to begging too.
Maheshwari from Thirukkovil in Ampara district wants to
build her life and provide a better future for her children.
Still living in her transitional house, she dreams of
continuing her paddy farming which she did with her husband
prior to the tsunami. Her husband perished in the deadly
tidal waves.
Today, she anxiously waits the monsoons which are to begin
in the next few days or weeks. The rain, she believes, will
water her rice crop and bring new hope to her family.
“I want to build a house and find partners for my unmarried
children,” says Maheshwari, who speaks Tamil and
communicated with the Daily News through a translator.
Maheshwari is small in stature and worn down by the hard
life in the village. At 56 she looks more like 80. She is
the mother of 10 children, eight |
          
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daughters and two sons, who
died during the region’s two-decade conflict.
Five of her eight daughters are married. For months she has been
living in a transitional house made of planks in a tiny, temporary
village especially set up for the tsunami survivors. Even after
one-year she continues to live in the same settlement.
However, she has the courage to lead a gainful life. Thanks to a
grant scheme initiated by an international NGO, Maheshwari could
plough her paddy fields for the second time. “I have courage now,”
she says. “I know I’ll have to be strong and do everything alone to
be successful,” she said.
Amid all obstacles, hundreds of women such as Maheshwari are showing
remarkable determination to move themselves and their families from
the temporary shelters to better places.
Often, the crucial boost comes from various government and non
governmental organisations. But this is not the complete story.
According to a study done by Sumika Perera of the Women and Media
Collective many women survivors are still languishing and the
hardships that they were exposed to over the last year were immense.
Perera says that she visited many tsunami-affected areas through the
Coalition for Assisting Tsunami Affected Women-CATAW and observed
that many women survivors are faced with issues such as lack of
proper houses, toilets, health facilities (specially for pregnant
and lactating mothers), livelihoods and education facilities for
their children.
Perera is of the view that there are many important points to
consider when resettling the tsunami-affected people, as many women
want to live in an area where there is sufficient security for their
children and where they can restart livelihoods without much hassle.
Perera says that a group of women she met in Galle lamented that
they would not be able to continue to be involved in the coir
industry in the future because the housing units they are getting
are far away from the coir industry locations.
In certain villages, women also complained that the cash their
families received in building self-help housing units were not spent
100 percent for that purpose, because, the money was received by
their husbands. And they spent the money on their own. There were
women who found fault with their husbands because the men sold
certain relief items they received to buy liquor.
However, the situation with regard to the affected women in the
North and the East is more vulnerable. Many Muslim women who
continue to live in camps and in the temporary shelter do not have
sufficient freedom. Their movements are restricted as they have to
live among strangers in the temporary settlements.
Therefore, Perera calls upon the authorities concerned to provide
decent living facilities and opportunities for earning money.
What is most disturbing about the tsunami survivors in the South is
that many have got into the ‘dependency syndrome’. Around the three
damaged railway carriages in Peraliya is a growing begging culture.
The moment a vehicle carrying foreigners or locals stops near the
railway track in Peraliya - just to have a glimpse of the train, a
group of women and children runs to the scene and asks for help -
money. The women encourage their children to beg.
These women are supposed to be those who lived within the 100-metere
zone before the tsunami. Their houses are being constructed
elsewhere at present, although they still occupy the temporary
wooden houses built within the 100-metre zone.
When the Daily News queried why they behaved in this manner, they
said that they were in the coir industry before and were now
jobless. And up to now, they haven’t got any support.
We asked the children whether they went to school, to which they
answered happily ‘Yes’. They’ve got their books and everything as
well.
One thing never stops in Sri Lanka - school education. Come war or
the tsunami, kids in white uniforms and dark ties trudge to school.
And this is true both in the Sinhala speaking South and the Tamil
speaking North-East.
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